How to load navigation properties on an IdentityUser with UserManager

左心房为你撑大大i 提交于 2019-11-28 08:12:32

Unfortunately, you have to either do it manually or create your own IUserStore<IdentityUser> where you load related data in the FindByEmailAsync method:

public class MyStore : IUserStore<IdentityUser>, // the rest of the interfaces
{
    // ... implement the dozens of methods
    public async Task<IdentityUser> FindByEmailAsync(string normalizedEmail, CancellationToken token)
    {
        return await context.Users
            .Include(x => x.Address)
            .SingleAsync(x => x.Email == normalizedEmail);
    }
}

Of course, implementing the entire store just for this isn't the best option.

You can also query the store directly, though:

UserManager<IdentityUser> userManager; // DI injected

var user = await userManager.Users
    .Include(x => x.Address)
    .SingleAsync(x => x.NormalizedEmail == email);

The short answer: you can't. However, there's options:

  1. Explicitly load the relation later:

    await context.Entry(user).Reference(x => x.Address).LoadAsync();
    

    This will require issuing an additional query of course, but you can continue to pull the user via UserManager.

  2. Just use the context. You don't have to use UserManager. It just makes some things a little simpler. You can always fallback to querying directly via the context:

    var user = context.Users.Include(x => x.Address).SingleOrDefaultAsync(x=> x.Id == User.Identity.GetUserId());
    

FWIW, you don't need virtual on your navigation property. That's for lazy-loading, which EF Core currently does not support. (Though, EF Core 2.1, currently in preview, will actually support lazy-loading.) Regardless, lazy-loading is a bad idea more often than not, so you should still stick to either eagerly or explicitly loading your relationships.

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